Something that fits time-wise although I'm not sure if the event would be a launching point for a new series...the attack on the USS Farragut by the cloud creature. In the Season 2 episode "Obsession" Kirk mentions it was "eleven years ago" so it would put it right in the correct time frame.
KIRK: Gentlemen, we are remaining in orbit until I find out more about those deaths, on my responsibility. I am perfectly aware that it might cost lives on Theta Seven. Kirk out. Autopsy report.
MCCOY: You saw their color. There wasn't a red corpuscle left in their bodies.
KIRK: Marks, cuts, incisions of any kind?
MCCOY: Not a one. What happened is medically impossible.
KIRK: I suggest you look at the record tapes of past similar occurrences. You'll find the USS Farragut lists casualties eleven years ago from exactly the same impossible causes.
Fuller explicitly said it wasn't Axanar
First of all, Kirk was one of tens of thousands of survivors.
The Conscience of the King said:SPOCK: I will continue, Doctor. According to our library banks, it started on the Earth colony of Tarsus Four, when the food supply was attacked by an exotic fungus and largely destroyed. There were over eight thousand colonists and virtually no food. And that was when Governor Kodos seized full power and declared emergency martial law.
The name of the ship is Discovery. The name of the show is Discovery. Do you guys think that exploration bears into the plot? If it does, then only the Vulcanian expedition has a connection.
The event will be the loss of the USS Kelvin twenty years ago. The Discovery's mission will be to find out what happened to her.
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Maybe Fuller means the hypothetical 5 year mission following TMP?
Link?Fuller explicitly said it wasn't Axanar
I'd be a bit disappointed if this wasn't what they go with now!Well yes. But they also specifically referenced "Whom Gods Would Destroy" which pretty conclusively sets it as something having to do with Garth of Izar, yes? Please correct me if I am wrong, but Axanar was early in Garth's career, was it not. A young Captain showing great tactical chops. What was the mission that drove him mad? The rescue mission that pushed him round the bend to the point where his crew had to oppose him? Might that not be what we are looking at here? A single novel like story where a Lt. Commander is the main lead? Maybe the senior officer that had to lead the mutiny against Garth in order to end his madness and prevent genocide?
The name of the ship is Discovery. The name of the show is Discovery. Do you guys think that exploration bears into the plot? If it does, then only the Vulcanian expedition has a connection.
Link?
I was following the live blog as the event was going on, and nobody said he ruled it out. He ruled out the Romulan War, not Axanar. Feel free to correct me though.
-There were many attempts to guess what event Star Trek Discovery is set around, and while he wouldn't say which it was, Fuller shot down the following theories, saying the show is not set around Axanar, Kobayashi Maru, or Section 31. But he did note the Federation event he's referring to is referenced in the original series.
In a panel presented today at the Television Critics Association summer press tour, Bryan Fuller announced that DSC will bridge the gap between Enterprise and The Original Series, with the new show set ten years before Kirk’s five-year mission. Fuller teased that there was an event in the history of the Federation that had been discussed, but not explored. When asked if it was set during the Romulan War, Fuller said “close, but no cigar.” Fuller also denied that the show will revolve around the battle of Axanar or Section 31, but he hinted that the clandestine Starfleet organization will pop up in DSC.
Yes, I like this. It's not Axanar itself but the incident that drove him mad!Well yes. But they also specifically referenced "Whom Gods Would Destroy" which pretty conclusively sets it as something having to do with Garth of Izar, yes? Please correct me if I am wrong, but Axanar was early in Garth's career, was it not. A young Captain showing great tactical chops. What was the mission that drove him mad? The rescue mission that pushed him round the bend to the point where his crew had to oppose him? Might that not be what we are looking at here? A single novel like story where a Lt. Commander is the main lead? Maybe the senior officer that had to lead the mutiny against Garth in order to end his madness and prevent genocide?
That is not the meaning of expedition. For example, attempts to reach both north and south poles were called expeditions. So too the various efforts to find the source of the Nile.But an expedition is a military maneuver. And Vulcan is a known quantity by the time of STD. It doesn't appear as if there would remain anything to be discovered or explored on an expedition to Vulcan or Vulcania...
This is my thinking as well. The event could have to do with the Vulcan/Romulan split, or The Preservers or the disappearance of the Horizon etc. Any mentioned incident is possible.While the events of the series are set 10 years before Kirk took command of the Enterprise, does that mean that the event Fuller refers to need be 10 years prior? Can't it be even earlier but the effects of the event are still felt?
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